The term
hartley is named after
Ralph Hartley, who suggested in 1928 to measure information using a logarithmic base equal to the number of distinguishable states in its representation, which would be the base 10 for a decimal digit. The
ban and the
deciban were invented by
Alan Turing with
Irving John "Jack" Good in 1940, to measure the amount of information that could be deduced by the codebreakers at
Bletchley Park using the
Banburismus procedure, towards determining each day's unknown setting of the German naval
Enigma cipher machine. The name was inspired by the enormous sheets of card, printed in the town of
Banbury about 30 miles away, that were used in the process. Good argued that the sequential summation of
decibans to build up a measure of the weight of evidence in favour of a hypothesis, is essentially
Bayesian inference.
Donald A. Gillies, however, argued the
ban is, in effect, the same as
Karl Popper's measure of the severity of a test. == Usage as a unit of odds ==